Show Us Your Books, August 2017

This was a bizarre month for reading. In the beginning, I read a whole bunch of books very quickly. Then I started A Brief History of Seven Killings and it all went to shit because that book is killing ME. It’s so, so good but so, so dense and each chapter is like 4 pages and written in a different character’s voice and there’s about 97 characters (literally. There’s a cast of characters at the beginning to help you keep track) and it hurts my brain to read. I tried to quit 3 times but it keeps sucking me back in because I HAVE TO KNOW WHAT HAPPENS. But also I can’t take it. I’m really torn about what to do. Usually I can DNF a book without thinking but I can’t let this one go. WHAT’S A BOOKWORM TO DO?

I guess while I continue to wrestle with that, we can review all the books I did read this month. As always, my reviews are copied and sometimes embellished from my Litsy reviews

Ramona Blue by Julie Murphy. Whenever an author or band or actor produces something spectacular, it’s hard to imagine what the follow up will be like and it’s hard not to compare it to the previous work (did that make sense?). So it was hard to read this one, the one after Dumplin’, which is AMAZING, with no expectations but it lived up to all of them. Her take on sexuality, class, family, and obligations hit me in all the places and gave me the gamut of feels. You hate some characters, you love others, and you root for Ramona the whole time. Julie Murphy is an incredible storyteller and I love how she makes teenagers real, complex people rather than caricatures. I wish so hard her books existed when I was a teenager. They would have made such a difference to me.

We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Every idea, every anecdote, every thought is bigger than the 47 pages allow for and it is such an amazing conversation started around the ideas of feminism, culture, and gender roles that it should be required reading for everyone. It takes about 30 minutes to read but you will be thinking about it for hours afterwards.

The GrownUp by Gillian Flynn. The fuck did I read? This book (does it even qualify as a book?) is simultaneously fucked up and not horrifying at all. I liked the progression of the story from normalish weird to REALLY BIZARRE and it MESSES with your head but I loathed and detested the ending. I would have read this as a full length novel, so there’s that. And it’s short so it’s hard to say not to read it but just know that the ending is a cop out. A big steaming cop out.

Saint Maybe by Anne Tyler. So. This book is probably one of the saddest, most depressing books I have ever read (it gave The Story of Edgar Sawtelle a run for its money and if you’ve read that one, you know it’s a HIGH HIGH bar) but it was also beautiful in its own way. The story of a man’s promising future marred by loss, penance, and familial obligation, it’s told over multiple decades that’s confusing to follow at first but you get used to it. The religious overtones were a bit much but necessary to the overall plot and in the end, they become background noise to the rest of the story.

August Snow by Stephen Mack Jones. The thriller portion of this book is average, standard, and mostly predictable. What makes this book above average is the writing. It’s gorgeous and poetic and his descriptions of setting make you feel like you’re there. Like, I legit smelled Mexican food the entire time I read this book. I loved how he made Detroit a character as much as the people (like The Wire did with Baltimore) and he address class and racism and gentrification in a way that makes a point without being preachy.

The Half-Life of Remorse by Grant Jarrett. This was an ARC from NetGalley I finally got around to. This book about choices and trying to make things right when you’ve really fucked them up and how actions have bigger consequences than we imagine and loss and the tragic effect of one incident on multiple people is perfectly sad in all the right ways. The alternating POVs didn’t even get on my nerves! and when they all converged into one story, my heart broke. His storytelling is excellent and the simple yet huge plot made for a great read.

Made for Love by Alissa Nutting. I adore Alissa Nutting as a writer (and independent of her marriage to Dean Bakopoulos because they are two separate and distinct people). She is smart and funny and engaging about topics that are unpleasant and taboo. She has such a way with words that you can’t stop reading. And this book is funny, sad, dark, and social commentary all at once. It was also WEIRD AS FUCK. Like “am I really reading this shit” weird. But good. However, if sex in books bothers you, don’t read it. If it doesn’t then this one is a keeper and a definite add to ye old TBR.

In progress: Ill Will by Dan Chaon

TL; DR: Ramona Blue, Made for Love, and We Should All Be Feminists are must-adds. August Snow and The Half-Life of Remorse are also good choices but if you prefer lighter reading over the summer, save them for the fall and winter. The others I don’t not recommend but I don’t think they’re high priority reading either.

Now it’s your turn! Link up or let me know in the comments what you’ve read lately. Don’t forget to visit my co-host, Steph, and some of the other bloggers joining us. Next one is September 12 and in October we’ll be celebrating THREE YEARS of Show Us Your Books!

I struggle to DNF book and some are so hard to do because even though they are driving you nuts, you just can’t let go. 😀 I still need to read Dumplin (I know, I know) but I’m still adding Ramona Blue to my TBR. Plus, We Should All Be Feminists and Made for Love. I hope you like Ill Will. I enjoyed it, even though it’s incredibly messed up.

“Fading Feast.” Raymond Sokolov had the job that *I* want: In the early 1980s, he was paid to drive around the country and write about traditional regional cuisine like boudin rouge and the Indiana persimmon. His employer, the American Museum of Natural History, had the idea that these local foods were dying out. Ha! This updated version, which includes additional essays, notes that our interest in these old-time comestibles has come roaring back. It’s a delightful read, except that it made me hungry.

“The Memory Keeper’s Daughter.” I’m a little late to the game on this one, since it was a bestseller a few years back. It was a tough read but a wonderfully painful, infuriating and real look at how we justify our bad decisions — or, rather, how we HAVE to keep justifying them because we can’t call them back.

“Caleb’s Crossing.” Another finally-caught-up book (it came out in 2011), this is a fascinating (and fictionalized) look at history as told by a young woman who lived in the 1660s on what would later be called Martha’s Vineyard. She was secretly friends with a local youth who would go on to become the first Native American graduate of Harvard. The sexism, subordination of women and dismissal of Natives as “salvages” (that’s the way they spelled it) made me ragey, but it was still a luminous read.Donna Freedman recently posted…The painful truth about your emergency fund.

I just finished August Snow and have to admit I was kind of bored…if I hadn’t lived part of my childhood in the Detroit area and had that as an interest in the book, I would have not finished. Bummer. But! I absolutely love Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Her Dear Ijaeawele is also a super short and accessible read but will have you thinking and talking about it for days too. And I just heard another review with high praise for Ramona Blue, so it’s going on the list now!

Adding Ramona Blue and We Should All Be Feminists – I have heard that title so many times but had no idea it was so short. There’s no excuse not to read it now. I hate when you are dying to know the ending of something but don’t want to slog through and get there. Good luck with whatever you decide.

Adding Ramona Blue to my list… how could I not with that plot? Sounds fascinating. We Should All Be Feminists has been on my list… I love a good feminist read. I like short stories and Gillian Flynn, not sure how I have not read The Grownup yet, but maybe because I have not seen too many reviews of it. Anyway, I want to read it now!

I liked her books a lot (Dark Places and Sharp Objects more than Gone Girl) but this one. Meh. It’s like she thought because the Game of Thrones guy asked her to write it she could get away with it being mediocre.

I still haven’t read Dumplin, but I’m adding Ramona Blue to my list! It sounds like a great book! And I totally agree with you about The Grownup, it should have been a full blown book instead of novella. It just didn’t seem to really end well.

ugh that is the worst and i am the worst at ‘advice’. because i would totally keep trying with that book even if it was killing me, because the I HAVE TO KNOW WHAT HAPPENS kills me more.
i haven’t read any of julie murphy’s other books, i am scared after loving dumplin so much! i will add ramona blue to my list though.
i also still haven’t read Tampa, but i’ll add the other Alissa Nutting book to my list!

Oh good to know about Ramona Blue. I have heard mixed things, and I LOVED Dumplin’, so I was on the fence. You’ve convinced me completely. Excited for it now! I still need to read We Should All be Feminists. And then I’ll have KC read it. 🙂 XO – Alexandra

Ramona Blue will go on my TBR. At the very least, Dumplin will be bumped up. I need to carve out more reading time for great suggestions. I agree with your thoughts on We Should All Be Feminists. After I read it, I told my teen daughter and her friends, they needed to read it. It’s definitely a book that people shouldn’t hesitate to buy and keep on their book shelf to go back to again and again.

DNF is harder than actually powering through something horrible for me.
YYYAAAASSS to We Should All Be Feminists. I let myself get scared off for a while because of the African names. Stupiiiidddd.
Now, I’m interested in reading Ramona Blue. I really appreciated Murphy’s perspective from Dumplin’ so if the same is reflected in this book, I will probably enjoy it.

Oh man, I hate when a book takes me forever. I’d probably DNF and look up the ending if it got really bad.
Definitely adding both short stories to my TBR. My Blue (s/o) was trying to make the case for sexuality being fluid when we started, so I’m intrigued by Ramona Blue and want to check that one out too.

Alright, I have got to check out some of your selections. Ramona Blue sounds especially interesting and unlike anything else I have read! I am usually not a fan of teenage characters in books but this sounds good!

It sounds like these were pretty solid reads for the month. I freakin’ hate when I want to/know I should quit a book but I just can’t because something is keeping me going…
Good luck with that one. LolAudrey recently posted…What I Read… vol. 8

I feel like books that are told from a bazillion different viewpoints have to meet a higher standard. Like, it’s difficult to write that many engaging characters – but at the same time you HAVE to so I’ll remember them in their next viewpoint chapter in 100 pages or whenever. I totally DNFed Game of Thrones because of this – I got halfway through the 3rd book and by that point I was only enjoying maybe 2 of the character viewpoints.

I remember after Dumpllin’ thinking how much I wish that kind of book had been around when I was growing up, and Ramona Blue falls into that category too. I loved it. I think Made for Love will make it to my TBR.

I’ve been intrigued by Alissa Nutting but you know, my personal choice was that I couldn’t read the subject matter of Tampa, so I will definitely be looking for Made for Love.texerinsydney recently posted…I’ll show you my books, you show me yours… vol.31